Events

Canonical and Non-canonical Autophagy Related Processes in Microbial Pathogenesis

Tuesday, January 9th, 10:00am - 11:00am

Please join the AIM Center for a Mini e-Symposium on January 9, 2024 with special guest speakers from Toronto, Canada and Cambridge, United Kingdom.

 

Dr. John Brumell, Professor at the University of Toronto will be presenting on "SLIT2/ROBO1 signaling suppresses mTORC1 for organelle control and bacterial killing".

Dr. Felix Randow, from the University of Cambridge will be presenting on "How TECPR1 conjugates LC3 to damaged membranes upon detection of sphingomyelin exposure"

AIM Core Facility Open House e-Workshop

Tuesday, June 20th, 8:30am to Thursday, June 27th, 11:30am

The AIM Center of Biomedical Research Excellence Core Facility Center announces a Hybrid Open House Workshop!

Join us via zoom in the mornings for talks regarding usage of instruments in the AIM Core Facility as well as company representatives who will visit to give insight on additional equipment use and how to better take advantage of these instruments available in the Core Facility for benefit of any ongoing research.

This event will be a hybrid event, talks will be through Zoom in the morning. For more information on how to use Zoom, visit https://zoom.us/.

Workshop announcment
Workshop announcment

AIM Statistics Workshop - Tuesday, May 30, 2023 at 3pm

Tuesday, May 30th, 2:00pm - 3:00pm

The AIM Center will be having a special Tuesday AIM Session this coming Tuesday, May 30, 2023 at 3pm (MST), featuring AIM Statistics Workshop, by Dr. Yiliang Zhu!

AIM eSymposium Workshops 2022-2023

Tuesday, February 14th, 10:00am to Tuesday, April 4th, 10:00am

The AIM Center of Biomedical Research Excellence announces its 5th annual symposium!

Join us for plenary talks from guests around the world on topics such as covid-19, autophagy, inflammation, and metabolism!

With the ongoing pandemic in mind, this event will be hosted online, through Zoom. For more information on how to use Zoom, visit https://zoom.us/.

 

Join us using this link: https://hsc-unm.zoom.us/j/91665710569

Ouroboros, autophagy, mitochondria, ER and disease

Tuesday, April 12th, 11:00am - 12:00pm

AIM Center seminar talk by Dr. Eric Baehrecke.

AIM Early Career Investigator Series

Tuesday, January 18th, 10:00am - 11:30am

The AIM Center of Biomedical Research Excellence concludes its 4th annual Symposium with the Early Investigator Series on January 18, 2022, at 10am MST.

 

 

Join us for talks from two keynote speakers, Dr. Malene Hansen from the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute and Dr. Andrew Thornburn from the University of Colorado Denver. In addition to these speakers, the AIM Center will also have two early investigators giving talks followed by Q&A.

Due to the ongoing pandemic, this event will be hosted via Zoom. Please visit https://zoom.us/ for more information on how to use Zoom.

The AIM Center's 2021 eSymposia Workshop

Tuesday, October 12th, 9:00am to Tuesday, February 8th, 7:00pm

The AIM Center of Biomedical Research Excellence announces its 4th annual symposium!

Join us for plenary talks from guests around the world on topics such as covid-19, autophagy, inflammation, and metabolism!

With the ongoing pandemic in mind, this event will be hosted online through Zoom. For more information on how to use Zoom, visit https://zoom.us/.

Keystone Symposia eSymposia - Autophagy: Mechanisms and Disease

Monday, October 5th, 5:00am to Thursday, October 8th, 10:59pm

Autophagy is an intracellular pathway for degradation that allows for the recycling of cellular components inside lysosomes to sustain tissue homeostasis. Countless effort has been devoted to help unravel the molecular mechanisms that regulate this pathway, but many questions remain unresolved. Therefore, this conference program gathers an interdisciplinary group of scientists to address the current and future challenges in the field such as discussions on the existence of non-canonical forms of the pathway and how selectivity is achieved. This conference also addresses the minimal requirements to generate functional autophagosomes and the molecular bases of autophagy regulation. One of the major themes of this conference is a session which reviews how model systems such as plants, worms and mice help to unravel the physiological roles of this essential pathway and why this research can also be applied to find new therapies for human diseases. For example, while it is now clear that many human pathologies have alterations in autophagy, how scientists could potentially manipulate the pathway in vivo is a major challenge that will be addressed at this conference. Finally, this conference provides a unique frame to display the current research and future challenges of the field during physiological and pathological conditions.

Studies of GPER's Metabolic Function in the AIM CoBRE

Tuesday, May 19th, 2:00pm - 3:00pm

Presentation by: Eric Prossnitz, Phd 
“Studies of gper’s metabolic function in the aim cobre”

Tuesday AIM Seminar (TAIMS) - Dr. Bryce C. Chackerian & Dr.David S. Peabody

Tuesday, May 12th, 3:00pm - 4:00pm

(Special Covid-19/TAIMS)

Bryce C. Chackerian, PhD

“Vaccine strategies for SARS-CoV-2”

David S. Peabody, PhD

 “Making a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine on an RNA phage-derived platform”